Over the past 14 months, Western countries have pledged to provide Ukraine with more than $65 billion worth of direct military aid, most of it coming from the United States. Now, with a major Ukrainian counteroffensive looming, prominent officials in Kyiv have begun to call for those Western countries to assume a more forward role in the maintenance of that new arsenal, including the provision of technical personnel on the ground closer to the war zone.
"I am sure that our partners could hire such specialists, and we would do everything in our capacity to organize for them to come to Ukraine," Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksiy Reznikov said in response to a question from Newsweek at a briefing held on April 10 at the Ukraine Media Center in Odesa. "We have been suggesting for quite a long time that our partners assist in providing maintenance at the maximum proximity to the battlefield."
"It is very complicated to send a tank all the way to Europe for repairs," Reznikov explained. "If we could have specialists with access to the necessary documents come here, it would really help."
Anyone who says they're doing well enough with tele-maintenance is lying to themselves.
Currently, all of the Western technicians known to be assisting Ukraine with the maintenance of imported weapons systems are located outside the country's borders. Although thousands of ex-active duty military personnel have voluntarily taken up arms on Kyiv's behalf, maintenance specialists, even experienced ones, require access to classified technical manuals in order to perform their duties at the requisite standard.